Calais businesses hoping for boost following destruction of the ‘Jungle’ refugee camp

A new scent is in the air in Calais called “apres-Jungle”, but it is not an exotic aftershave.
Rather it sums up the northern French port’s hopes and fears for the future following the dismantling of the notorious “Jungle” migrant camp in its backyard.
The bars and restaurants of the high street, the Rue Royale, “used to be packed with Britons”, said pensioner Michelle Toulotte in a brasserie where staff outnumbered the customers.
“It’s about time” the Jungle was cleared, said Christophe Defever, owner of the Au Davydson brasserie, a stone’s throw from the town’s central rail station.
“The economy has really suffered since they’ve been here,” he said. “It’s easier to count the shops that are closed than those that are open.”
While a quick tour of the city centre revealed that to be an exaggeration, the shuttered Le Tub disco in the Rue Royale attested to a more vibrant past.
